And if it's being pragmatic that's your concern, and you actually want
some control over how your web site operates, some flexibility about
platform, and a net-full of free bolt-on enhancements, Apache is the only way
to go :-)
David.
"Preston L. Bannister" wrote:
> Keep in mind that once you saturate the network connection, all the web
> servers perform about the same :).
>
> If all you have is a T3 connection to the Internet (or less) just about any
> current web server on a 500Mhz Pentium can handle all the traffic your
> connection can bear.
>
> Benchmarks run on multiple switched 100 Mbit Ethernet connections are not
> very relevant if all you have is 10 Mbit Ethernet :).
>
> Unless you are on a very high end site with lots of network bandwidth, your
> choice of web server should be largely driven by other pragmatic concerns.
>
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--
David Bullock
Project Manager - Strategic Applications
LISA Corporation
38 Greenhill Rd, Wayville S.A. 5034
http://www.lisa.com.au/
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